Around the World from The Associated Press

Australia's new PM makes maiden trip to Indonesia

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott on Tuesday looked to move beyond border issues that have been a key part of his first trip abroad by promoting the importance of building stronger economic ties with neighboring Indonesia.

"More and more Australians now see Indonesia as a place to do business and to embark on joint ventures as well as to have a holiday," Abbott said at a breakfast with business leaders. "Our challenge is to ensure that more and more Indonesians see Australia as a good place to invest and do business, in short, as a trusted partner."

Abbott hit on the importance of expanding the countries' education, agriculture, investment and trade relationships, but he did not bring up the thorny asylum seeker issue that was discussed a day earlier with his Indonesian counterpart President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

The visit comes as more bodies from the latest boat tragedy were discovered, bringing the death toll to 41 after a vessel packed with Australia-bound migrants from the Middle East sank in Indonesian waters on Friday. Dozens more remain missing.

"We are determined to end this scourge, which is not just an affront to our two countries, but which has so often become a humanitarian disaster in the seas between our two countries," Abbott said Monday after meeting Yudhoyono.

He also stressed the importance of boosting economic ties between the countries from the current 14.6 billion Australian dollars ($13.6 billion) a year. He said a new Australian-Indonesia study center would be created at Monash University in Melbourne and that more Australians will be encouraged to pursue higher education in Indonesia.

"The new government's approach is very, very straightforward. We will take a respectful, consultative, no-surprises approach to relations with Indonesia," Abbott said Tuesday at the morning meeting attended by Indonesia's trade and finance ministers. "Our aim is to rebuild confidence so that both sides can respect each other and trust each other to keep commitments."

Border issues have been a long-standing headache between the two countries.

Indonesia, with its thousands of islands and shortage of maritime resources, is often used as a transit point by asylum seekers desperate to reach Australia's Christmas Island in hopes of starting a better life. Thousands board rickety fishing boats every year to make the often deadly journey, which typically crosses about 340 kilometers (210 miles) of open sea.

Abbott won the Sept. 7 election on the promise that he would stop the asylum seeker boats.

Indonesia has expressed concern over Abbott's "tow-back" plan, which involves the Australian navy intercepting and forcing back Indonesian fishing boats crowded with asylum seekers. Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa has warned that the move could breach the country's sovereignty.

On Monday, Abbott pledged "Australia's total respect for Indonesia's sovereignty."

Yudhoyono agreed that the two countries must work closely together to combat the problem.

"The solution is cooperation," he said, adding that specific details would be worked out at another forum between the countries. "Effective, precise and good cooperation."

Australian Immigration Minister Scott Morrison on Monday maintained his government's policy of refusing to say whether any boat had been turned back to Indonesia since the new administration took power on Sept. 18.